WWD Digital Daily

Change at The Top

● Riccardo Bellini is to succeed Geoffroy de la Bourdonnay­e, effective Dec. 1.

- BY MILES SOCHA

Riccardo Bellini tapped as CEO at Chloé.

In another sign that Richemont is shaking up its underperfo­rming fashion division, its Chloé maison named a new chief executive officer.

Riccardo Bellini, currently ceo of Maison Margiela, will join Chloé effective Dec. 1, the house said in a statement on Thursday, confirming a report on WWD.com.

Bellini is to succeed longtime Chloé ceo Geoffroy de la Bourdonnay­e, who has navigated the house through several changes in creative direction and the death of founder Gaby Aghion in 2014. He had recently put the focus on the attributes of the Chloé girl, exalted at a dedicated cultural space in Paris that opened in 2017, housing the brand's archives, showrooms, a photograph­y studio and exhibition space.

De la Bourdonnay­e has been at the management helm since 2010. Before that, he was ceo at London retailer Liberty and president at Christian Lacroix. He had joined the fashion industry after a long career at The Walt Disney Co.

He piloted Chloé through several changes in designers, recruiting

Clare Waight Keller from Pringle to succeed Hannah MacGibbon. When Waight Keller became the couturier at Givenchy in 2017, he tapped Natacha Ramsay-Levi from Louis Vuitton. It is understood Ramsay-Levi's contract runs through the spring.

The affable executive also orchestrat­ed 60th anniversar­y festivitie­s, unveiled a new store concept, launched the brand into e-commerce and took its fashion show outside of Paris for the first time with a resort display in Shanghai last May.

“We would like to thank Geoffroy de la Bourdonnay­e for his tenure as ceo of Chloé, for his contributi­on to the Maison and significan­t involvemen­t in transformi­ng Chloé,” the house said in a statement, noting he would step down effective Nov. 30. His next move could not immediatel­y be learned.

Bellini spent two-and-a-half years at Maison Margiela, which on Wednesday announced it had renewed the contract of its creative director John Galliano amid strong business momentum.

Bellini joined Margiela in spring 2017 from Diesel, where he was executive vice president of branding at Diesel and Diesel Black Gold and chief marketing officer at Diesel. Diesel and Margiela are part of the Italian fashion group controlled by Renzo Rosso. Its other properties include Marni, Viktor & Rolf, Amiri, Staff Internatio­nal and Brave Kids.

Prior to Bellini's Diesel career, he worked at Procter & Gamble Co. for a decade, making him another beauty executive who has carved a fruitful career in fashion.

“OTB thanks Riccardo for his work and contributi­on to the group and wishes him all the best for his future endeavors,” the group said in a statement, noting that “a new ceo will be announced in due time.”

At Chloé, Bellini will be faced with the challenge of revving up a brand that has recently lagged its luxury peers and struggled to reclaim the intense buzz and acclaim it generated under Phoebe Philo during the 2001 to 2006 period. Her Paddington bag was one of the original “It” bags that made Chloé a name to watch in leather goods.

With Cartier serving as Richemont's revenue engine, and the specialist, high-end watch business beginning to pick up after a major transforma­tion, the fashion and accessorie­s division remains a challenge for the group, especially with such fast- growing, larger competitor­s such as Louis Vuitton,

Gucci, Saint Laurent and Celine.

A few years ago, Richemont began slimming down the division and putting the focus on its top fashion and accessorie­s names. It sold Shanghai Tang and Lancel, and began to ramp up its high-end leather goods production with the purchase of the artisanal Milanese brand Serapian.

Fashion, lifestyle and accessorie­s is Richemont's smallest division, and includes Dunhill, Alaïa and Peter Millar, in addition to Chloé.

In the April to June period, the division saw sales contract 3 percent, mostly due to the disposal of accessorie­s brand Lancel in 2018. Richemont said the “strong performanc­e” of Peter Millar, a golf and luxury sports apparel brand, during the period contrasted with that of the other maisons in the division.

In September, the division's chief, Eric Vallat, stepped down a little more than a year after taking up the job.

The same month, Maison Alaïa named Myriam Serrano its new ceo. She had been Chloé's director of communicat­ion and accessorie­s.

Last week, Richemont surprised again with a new fashion project: a joint venture with former Lanvin designer Alber Elbaz known as AZfashion, a from-scratch project aimed at wardrobe “solutions” for women.

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 ??  ?? Kaia Gerber on the catwalk at Chloé fall 2019 show.
Kaia Gerber on the catwalk at Chloé fall 2019 show.
 ??  ?? Geoffroy de la Bourdonnay­e at the WWD x Le Palmeraie Cocktail during spring 2020 Paris Fashion Week.
Geoffroy de la Bourdonnay­e at the WWD x Le Palmeraie Cocktail during spring 2020 Paris Fashion Week.

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